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So what is the problem? It would be like performing at the local hall. There is no real presence so there is no sacrilege.
In between songs says silent prayers for the salvation of all those in attendance.
Marsha
You are wrong. If there is a tabernacle in the Church with the Blessed Sacrament in it, then there is a Real Presence.
This is the danger of sede-ism. A sede-ist might be presuming incorrectly, and there might be the Real Presence there, and if so, would act according to false principles and disrespect Our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament. Whether or WE BELIEVE that He is present is not the determining factor. Either He IS or he IS NOT, and we are not supposed to be the ones judging that question.
:confused1:
Peter may have a point. Is the Blessed Sacrament present in the room where you will be performing? IME, most novus ordo churches have Our Lord, if He's even there, secreted away in a side room. If you are performing sacred music, I still don't see a problem. If the music is of a secular nature, then I'd check the church in advance. Maybe the priest will remove Our Lord to another place such as is done at some Traditional chapels in order to have a conference. Secular music should not be performed before Our Lord.
Good point, Frances. If the tabernacle is visible, it should be open door, and empty.
If the tabernacle is not plainly visible (as in a growing number of NovusOrdo Newchurch buildings) then the door should still be open, and the inside emptied of its contents, first of which is the Blessed Sacrament.
Depending on the venue, it might be difficult for Pelly to find out where the tabernacle is, and whether it is empty. She might find the tabernacle in a broom closet, for example (they are in places like that now-a-days) and locked closed. But then, upon asking someone who ought to know, she might find that A) they do not know whether the tabernacle is in fact empty, or B) they don't care to find out for her because they have more important things to do and she could only be asking that question if she's a troublemaker.
She could actually get in trouble with her instructor or her school if they discover that she's going around looking for information or asking such questions.
I would recommend, Pelly, that you go to the venue in advance of the day of the choir convention, and quietly walk around to find the tabernacle and then politely ask if you can speak to the pastor. When you do, it might be best to not let him know that you are in one of the choirs, but that you are a Catholic who has found other such locations where there are improper things going on, and that it is really proper to have the tabernacle empty and the door open, during any secular use of the church - like this is going to be.
Your telling him that in advance might be the only time he has ever heard it.
If you have a convincing approach, of which I am confident you are capable, Pelly, you might be the agent God has found to give this pastor a message that he would never receive even from his bishop. God works in mysterious ways.
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